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The nuance of steam heat balancing: Why theory isn't always reality

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patrykrebisz
patrykrebisz Member Posts: 115

I wanted to share some thoughts on what we might call the "nuance" of steam heat balancing. We often hear the basic theory: steam leaves the boiler, hits the main vents, and then fills the radiators based on vent size. In a perfect world, if two radiators are equidistant from the boiler on two different mains, they should heat up at the exact same time.

But the theory often ignores the limited amount of steam at the boiler buildup. Most of the time, our boilers aren't running; they are waiting for a call for heat. When that call finally comes, the pipes aren't steaming hot—they're just "warmish". In my experience, when that first SMALL amount of steam starts moving, it doesn't behave like the textbooks say. It looks for the path of least resistance—usually the closest main pipe rather than pipe with largest vent—and travels much slower (according to AI, 1 ft/second compared to 10 ft/second in a hot system). This means your thermostat might satisfy and shut off the boiler before the furthest radiators even starts heating up.

So even with proper pitch, proper large main vents, proper condensate return, insulation around the pipes, correct differing size of radiator vents, the theory doesn't match the nuance of reality. 

On my own system, the "favored" (closes to boiler) main fed a radiator in the room with thermostat. I had to mount pinhole-sized vent on the radiator AND swap main vent for something smaller to throttle down the speed. By restricting the "easy" path, I forced the system to build enough pressure to send steam down the other main, finally getting heat to all my radiators simultaneously.

If you’re struggling with uneven heat, my advice is to get down into your basement and really map out your piping to know what might ACTUALLY heat up first. There’s a real nuance to how these old systems breathe, and sometimes you have to "trick" the steam into doing what you want.

»»» See my steam heat YouTube videos:
https://www.youtube.com/@HeatingBlog

ethicalpaul

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